Men with Brooms

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Men with Brooms
MenwithBroomsMP.jpg
Promotional poster
Directed by Paul Gross
Written byPaul Gross
John Krizanc
Paul Quarrington
Produced by Robert Lantos
StarringPaul Gross
Connor Price
Leslie Nielsen
Peter Outerbridge
Kari Matchett
Molly Parker
Polly Shannon
CinematographyThom Best
Edited by Susan Maggi
Distributed by Alliance Atlantis
Release date
  • March 8, 2002 (2002-03-08)
Running time
102 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
Budget$7.5 million [1] [2]
Box office$4.2 million [3]

Men with Brooms is a 2002 Canadian romantic comedy film, starring and directed by Paul Gross. Centred on the sport of curling, the offbeat comedy tells the story of a reunited curling team from a small Canadian town as they work through their respective life issues and struggle to win the championship for the sake of their late coach.

Contents

The cast also includes Connor Price, Leslie Nielsen, Peter Outerbridge, Kari Matchett, Molly Parker and Polly Shannon. Members of the Canadian rock band The Tragically Hip make a cameo appearance in the film as a competing rink representing Kingston, Ontario, the band's home city. Winnipeg curler and three-time Brier champion Jeff Stoughton also made a cameo appearance throwing his trademark "spin-o-rama" shot.

A television adaptation, also titled Men with Brooms debuted October 4, 2010 on CBC Television for the 2010-11 television season.

Plot

The movie begins with Donald Foley retrieving curling stones from a lake near Long Bay, Ontario. Foley dies after retrieving the stones, and a codicil to his will demands that the curling rink he formerly coached be re-assembled, and enter a bonspiel to win the Golden Broom by placing a stone containing his ashes on the button.

The team's skip, Chris Cutter, had skipped town ten years ago over the shame of failing to call a burnt stone, abandoning his fiancée Julie Foley (Donald's daughter) at the altar, and throwing the team's stones into the lake. Chris returns to Long Bay, where he convinces the former members of his team, Neil Bucyk, James Lennox, and Eddie Strombeck, to enter the competition for the Golden Broom.

While the rink practices for the Golden Broom tournament, Chris tries to make amends with Julie, which is complicated by his feelings for her younger sister Amy. Neil deals with his resentment towards his wife, and unhappiness at running a funeral home inherited from his father-in-law. Eddie deals with his low sperm count and dissatisfaction about being unable to father children. James is working as a minor drug dealer, and tries to raise money to pay off a supplier to whom he is indebted. [4]

After losing a match to an extremely elderly rink, the team realises they need a coach to be prepared for the bonspiel. Chris reconciles with his estranged father Gordon Cutter, so he will coach them. Gordon trains the team for the upcoming bonspiel.

In the first match of the bonspiel, the rink plays another one, skipped by former Olympian Alexander Yount. Chris again fails to call a burnt stone, demoralising himself, the rest of his rink, and his father. Chris goes drinking at a bar, where Amy meets him and informs him she and Julie have come to an understanding; Julie accepts that he and Amy love one another, and once Chris accepts it they can be together. Julie, an astronaut will meanwhile be blasted off into space. Chris goes to his mother's grave where he encounters his father; they reconcile, and Gordon tells him to go be with Amy. [4]

Neil quits the rink, and is replaced by Gordon. However, in the second to last match, Gordon once again throws out his back and is unable to curl. However, Chris and his rink manage to win the match.

In the final match of the bonspiel, the rink once again meets Yount's. With Gordon injured, Chris is forced to curl with a rink of three. Down 6-0 early, Gordon laments that they "need a good lead man." At this time, Neil and his wife are at the country club. Joanne rushes to the club and convinces Neil to rejoin the rink. Chris and his rink stage a comeback, and are now within victory.

On the critical final shot, one of the sweepers burns the stone, noticed only by Chris. In this instance, Chris calls the burn. Yount allows Chris to retake the shot, to which Chris changes up his shot. Chris throws his father's rock directly at the centre of the house with great force, smashing it and the rock it collided with. A large piece of granite lands directly on the button, along with Coach Foley's ashes. Chris and his rink have not only won the Golden Broom bonspiel, but have also fulfilled Coach Finley's final wish. [4]

In the end the team resolves their issues: Chris finally connects with Amy, Neil and Joanne talk about his dream to own a plant nursery and not run the funeral home, Eddie finally impregnates his wife and James finally is forgiven his debt to his drug supplier, as the collector is from a long line of curlers.

Cast

Production

Origins

The film began from a discussion that Gross had with producer Robert Lantos right after Due South was cancelled. Lantos had an idea for a hockey film: "I talked to (co-writer) John Krizanc about it, but it was too complicated with that number of characters. Besides, hockey is political. It's hard to talk hockey in this country since we think of it as our game, but it's largely owned by others." [5] Gross solved those problems by replacing hockey with curling.

In October 2000, Gross was still working on the script with Krizanc and another writer, Paul Quarrington. [6]

Pre-production and filming

According to Thom Best (the film's director of photography), [7] the film had three weeks of pre-production, which mostly consisted of scouting locations in Ontario. Six weeks of principal photography took place in Toronto, in locations such as a studio space and the streets in Uxbridge. Four days of exteriors were shot around the mines in Sudbury, and two more weeks of principal photography occurred in Hamilton and Brampton curling rinks.

Alliance Atlantis invested $1.5 million or more in the film's print and advertising campaign, which included an eight-city, private jet tour for cast, the director, and producer Robert Lantos. [8]

Reception

The film attracted $1.04 million in North American box office, opening on 215 screens in 207 theatres for a $5,024 per-screen average, the third highest among all North American releases for the three-day opening period starting March 8. [8] It ended up grossing over $4.2 million in Canada [3] [9]  – making it the top-grossing English Canadian film subsidized by Telefilm Canada between 1997 and 2002. [10] Released on 27 screens in the United States, it grossed $14 765. [11]

American magazine Entertainment Weekly gave the film a grade of C-, calling the film's cast "charming" but criticized the script for being "alternately overdetermined and touching, crass and sharply comic." [12] Reviewers for Jam! were split. [13] One called it a "perplexing example of promise unfulfilled, despite many charming moments...[whose] romantic elements are light, like watery beer with the alcoholic kick removed. And the comedy elements are often too crude and clumsy to do justice to the movie's situations." Another called it a "winning ensemble comedy that shows Canadians can put gentle laughs and equally gentle sentiments on the button, just as easily as their counterparts anywhere else in the world." Hollywood trade paper Variety called it a "wan romantic comedy" with "ineffective physical comedy in slightly crude Brit geezer vein...[and] a load of unneeded expletives." [14]

The film now has a cult following on DVD. Many relish the gentle Canadian comedy with its wry look at its country.

In September 2002, Lantos told Playback that he and Gross had a sequel in development. [9]

The film won a Canadian Comedy Award for its "Pretty Funny Direction", and received two nominations at the 23rd Genie Awards, one for Molly Parker's performance and another for the screenplay. [15]

Soundtrack and book

A soundtrack album for the film was released, with songs by The Tragically Hip, Kathleen Edwards, The New Pornographers, and Our Lady Peace among others. A best-selling novelization [16] by Diane Baker-Mason ( ISBN   1-55278-263-8) was also published in 2002.

Not included on the soundtrack is the opening theme, an arrangement by Jack Lenz of the Canadian folksong Land of the Silver Birch performed by Paul Gross, Jack Lenz and D Cameron. The song's lyrics and relevance remain the focus of debate for many fans.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Curling</span> Team sport played on ice

Curling is a sport in which players slide stones on a sheet of ice toward a target area which is segmented into four concentric circles. It is related to bowls, boules and shuffleboard. Two teams, each with four players, take turns sliding heavy, polished granite stones, also called rocks, across the ice curling sheet toward the house, a circular target marked on the ice. Each team has eight stones, with each player throwing two. The purpose is to accumulate the highest score for a game; points are scored for the stones resting closest to the centre of the house at the conclusion of each end, which is completed when both teams have thrown all of their stones once. A game usually consists of eight or ten ends.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ottawa Curling Club</span>

The Ottawa Curling Club is an historic curling club located on O'Connor Street in the Centretown neighbourhood of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It is the oldest curling club in Ottawa, established in 1851 by Allan Gilmour as the Bytown Curling Club. The Club first played on the Rideau Canal until 1858. It subsequently moved to different locations around the city until finally settling at its current location on O'Connor in 1916. In 1931 the club was expanded to the current capacity of 5 curling sheets. Artificial ice was also installed at that time.

A bonspiel is a curling tournament, consisting of several games, often held on a weekend. Until the 20th century most bonspiels were held outdoors, on a frozen freshwater loch. Today almost all bonspiels are held indoors on specially prepared artificial ice.

This is a glossary of terms in curling.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jeff Stoughton</span> Canadian curler

Jeffrey R. "Jeff" Stoughton is a Canadian retired curler. He is a three-time Brier champion and two-time World champion as skip. Stoughton retired from competitive curling in 2015. He is one of the most successful Manitoba skips in curling history, and one of the most successful players in Canadian curling history. He is currently the National Men's Coach and Program Manager for Curling Canada, as well as being the head coach of the Canadian Mixed Doubles National Team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bemidji Curling Club</span> Curling club in USA

The Bemidji Curling Club is a curling club located in the city of Bemidji, Minnesota. It is notable for its long line of champions in many competitions, including men's and women's rinks which represented the United States in the 2005 World Curling Championship and the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. Pete Fenson skipped the men's rink, which won the Olympic bronze medal, the first-ever medal in curling for the U.S. Cassandra Johnson skipped the women's rink, which lost to Sweden in the final match of the 2005 World Women's Curling Championship. Another of the club's members, Scott Baird, played as an alternate on the Olympic men's rink.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SaskTel Tankard</span>

The SaskTel Tankard is the annual provincial championship for men's curling in Saskatchewan, with the winner representing the province at the Montana's Brier, the national men's championship. The bonspiel, which is organized by CURLSASK, the provincial curling association, is also known as the SaskTel Provincial Men's Curling Championship. SaskTel became the title sponsor in 2004; the Tankard was previously known as the Macdonald Tankard (1927–1979), the Labatt Tankard (1980–1994), the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Tankard (1995–2003), and the SaskTel Mobility Tankard (2004–2006).

A. Paul "The Round Mound of Come Around" Savage is a Canadian curler, world champion and Olympic medallist.

Jamie Koe is a Canadian curler. He has played in 14 Briers, representing the Northwest Territories/Yukon team and three Briers representing just the Northwest Territories. At the 2012 Brier, he became the first skip from Canada's north to make the playoffs at the Brier since the addition of the playoffs in 1980.

Kevin Park is a Canadian curler from Edmonton, Alberta.

Clarence Gordon Perry Sr. was a star football player in the Canadian Football League for the Montreal AAA Winged Wheelers. He was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1970 and into the Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.

Men with Brooms is a Canadian television sitcom, which debuted on CBC Television on October 4, 2010. It is a television adaptation of the 2002 film Men with Brooms, and was filmed in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

The Potomac Curling Club is a curling club started in 1961 and currently curling in Laurel, Maryland. Operating out of the National Capital Curling Center, a dedicated curling ice facility at The Gardens Ice House operated under a long-term lease since 2002, the group maintains four sheets of dedicated curling ice, the only dedicated curling ice in the Washington, D.C., area. The club operates during the main curling season, although social events for the membership occur during the summer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brad Jacobs</span> Canadian curler

Bradley Robert Jacobs is a Canadian curler from Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. He currently plays skips Team Reid Carruthers. He is an Olympic champion skip, having led Canada to a gold medal at the 2014 Winter Olympics. Jacobs is also the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier championship skip and the 2013 World Championship runner-up. He is an 12-time Northern Ontario provincial champion, and one time provincial junior champion.

Paul Pustovar is an American curler from Hibbing, Minnesota. He is one of the most prolific curlers from the United States, with over thirty years of experience. He has earned two bronze medals at the World Curling Championships and has earned five gold medals, four silver medals, and one bronze medal in the twenty-five national championships that he has participated in. He is also a former world senior champion.

Jay Wakefield is a Canadian curler from Maple Ridge, British Columbia. He is a former provincial junior champion and currently plays second for the Paul Cseke rink on the World Curling Tour.

David "D. J." Kidby is a Canadian curler from Regina, Saskatchewan.

Neil Gordon "Harry" Harrison was a Canadian curler from Newmarket, Ontario. He was a six-time provincial champion, and two-time Canadian and World champion. He is considered to be one of the best leads of all time. He is recognized as having revolutionized the position with the use of the corner guard.

Dan Holowaychuk is a Canadian curler from St. Albert, Alberta.

Bryan Miki is a Canadian curler.

References

  1. "Men With Brooms gives curling a boost". Playback . May 14, 2001.
  2. "Men with Brooms (2002) - Financial Information". The Numbers . Retrieved November 14, 2023.
  3. 1 2 "Men with Brooms (2002)". The Numbers. Retrieved November 14, 2023.
  4. 1 2 3 K Edgington; Thomas Erskine; James M. Welsh (2010). Encyclopedia of Sports Films. Scarecrow Press. ISBN   9780810876538.
  5. Amsden, Cynthia (March 2002). "FindArticles.com - CBSi". findarticles.com. Archived from the original on August 13, 2004.
  6. "Bellwood does second flick". Playback. October 2, 2000.
  7. Dillon, Mark (April 1, 2002). "Best sweeps his way to the top". Playback.
  8. 1 2 "Men With Brooms on the money". Playback. March 18, 2002.
  9. 1 2 "Robert Lantos: It's do or die for Canadian films". Playback. September 2, 2002.
  10. "Telefilm introduces 'hurdle rates'". Playback. June 10, 2002.
  11. Weeks, Bob (March 18, 2010). Curling, Etcetera: A Whole Bunch of Stuff About the Roaring Game. John Wiley and Sons. p. 39. ISBN   9780470738894.
  12. Richter, Erin (November 1, 2002). "Men with Brooms". Entertainment Weekly . Archived from the original on April 25, 2009.
  13. "CANOE -- JAM! Movies - Reviews - Men with Brooms". Archived from the original on July 16, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  14. Koehler, Robert (March 21, 2002). "Men With Brooms". Variety .
  15. "2003 Genie Awards nominees". Playback. December 19, 2002.
  16. "Index". Archived from the original on November 22, 2008. Retrieved August 3, 2008.